What Autocrats do

I have been watching this bill “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” slither through the House and move to the Senate. What is occurring here is, Trump trying to kill all opposition to be in control. Or another power play with Republicans backing him up. too afraid of Trump, they are looking the other way as this moves forward.

A single paragraph buried deep in a spending bill that passed the GOP-controlled House of Representatives earlier this month is causing growing concern among democracy watchdogs who warn the provision will make it so only the well-to-do would be in a good position to launch legal challenges against a Trump administration that has shown over and over again its disdain and disregard for oversight or judicial restraint of any kind. As shown by Angry Bear:

  • Preliminary Injunction
  • Temporary Restraining Order.
  • (c) Security. The court may issue a preliminary injunction or a temporary restraining order only if the movant gives security in an amount that the court considers proper to pay the costs and damages sustained by any party found to have been wrongfully enjoined or restrained. The United States, its officers, and its agencies are not required to give security.
  • Etc.

On Saturday, Human Rights Watch (HRW) noted in a detailed social media thread how the provision “hasn’t gotten nearly enough scrutiny” from lawmakers or the public.

A recent piece by USA Today columnist Chris Brennan put it this way:

Want to challenge Trump? Pay up, the provision said in a way that could make it financially prohibitive for Americans to contest Trump’s actions in court.

HRW details how the provision, if included in the final legislation, “would make it more expensive to fight Trump’s policies in court by invoking a federal rule that effectively punishes anyone willing to stand up against the administration.”

Anyone seeking a legal action that would involve an injunction request against a presidential order or policy, the group said, would to face a much larger barrier because Republicans would make it so that anyone challenging Trump in court in this way would “have to pay up in the form of a posted bond—something many people can’t afford to do. That means only the wealthy will be able to even attempt to challenge the most powerful man in the country.”

But federal courts understandably rarely require that a bond be posted by those who are restraining unconstitutional federal, state, or local government actions. Those seeking such court orders generally do not have the resources to post a bond, and insisting on it would immunize unconstitutional government conduct from judicial review. It always has been understood that courts can choose to set the bond at zero.

Given his critique, Chemerinsky argued, “There is no way to understand this except as a way to keep the Trump administration from being restrained when it violates the Constitution or otherwise breaks the law. The House and the Senate should reject this effort to limit judicial power.”

Human Rights Watch appeared to agree with the profound dangers to the rule of law if the provision survives to Trump’s desk for signature.

“This is yet another sign of Trump’s brazen attempts to stop the judicial branch from holding him accountable,” the group warned. “This is what autocrats do. Consolidate power, increase the penalty for objecting, ultimately making it more difficult—eventually impossible—to challenge them.”